What I'm Reading These Days

I'm obviously not an objective reader,
but I can say that I'm really digging the book. It's about my
grandfather, a man I never knew. My mom never knew him, either -- he
was a submarine captain, and he died at sea before my mother was born.
Her mother, my grandmother, remarried quickly and tried to move on,
urging her children to do the same. So for most of my mom's life, she
obeyed, and didn't ask questions about her father. For the first
twenty-six years of my life I never thought about my grandfather. I
didn't have any stories about him, and because nobody had ever talked
about him, it didn't occur to me to be curious.

But my mom got curious about him about 9 years ago, and her
curiosity started her digging into archives, learning about submarines,
making friends with WWII veterans, and re-tracing the steps my
grandfather took while he was alive. And she wrote this book, about
him, and about what it was like for her to learn about and grieve a man
she never got to know.

I'm struck by how thorough she has been in her research, and how
brave. She's learned all kinds of things about submarines, about WWII,
and, indeed about war itself. She's questioned her own biases (a
pacifist, the process of war research forced her to reconsider her own
notions about war, duty, and honor). She asks uncomfortable questions:
was her parents' marriage a good one, was her father a gambler, did he
take unnecessary risks with his mens' lives? She's assembled what
seems like a pretty clear picture of a man, a life, and a time in
history, from interviews and scrapbook excerpts, old letters and war
accounts. It's her past she's discovering, and mine, and it's really
compelling to realize that I did want to know about this, all along.
I'm learning a lot about submarines and WWII history, and about its
impact on family life in the years immediately following, and this is
probably the most universally appealing and intellectually interesting
part of the book from an objective point of view. But for me those are
incidentals -- I'm reading to learn something way more personal.

I can see traits in myself that I probably inherited from this
grandfather I never knew. I'm gregarious; I like to work a room; I'll
strike up a conversation with a stranger without hesitation. It isn't
learned behavior. My parents are friendly but introverted. They'd
just as soon stay home and read, or, if they go out, sit at a corner
table with good friends. I've wondered over the years where my urge to
reach out comes from. I think it's from Jim Coe. There's something
really neat about getting a gift from someone who died 65 years ago.
And of course my mother gave me this gift: she gave me a second
grandfather, another one I can be proud of. I didn't know what I was
missing. It turns out it was a lot.

Comments

It is fascinating what the past produces when it is looked into. My uncle and his then-fiancee, now wife, went to Germany to look up family history and found out about a WWI U-Boat sailor who had the same name as my uncle. At the war memorial in the cemetery, just purely by coincidence, they met the woman who had been my ancestor's fiancee, who then helped them to fill in that whole part of the family history.

It is important to all of us to know about the past. But unfortunately, a lot of the actors in that past are reluctant to tell about their roles. Pat's dad took part in important actions in WWII in North Africa and Italy, but he is reluctant to talk about any of it -- he keeps saying "oh, it was nothing," he didn't do anything special, so he doesn't think we should make a big deal of it. He has a couple of stock war stories that he pulls out for family reunions (and that everyone's already heard before), but otherwise, he's mum.

i imagine this must've been quite a life-changing experience for your mother, especially in processing the information she has about her father and extrapolating tentative ideas about who he was, and what his life was like. and for you, too -- it's always somewhat surprising to realize for the first time that we've inherited a trait from a family member.

I think there is a difference between extreme views and being disturbed. And I don’t think Ron Paul or many of his followers are disturbed. He has many good points. And it’s not too bad to have someone out there letting the Federal Reserve know, they are like any other part of the system that doesn’t do it’s job or is not beneficial—THEY ARE EXPENDABLE.

I really enjoyed this book. It is written by someone who is not trained in the military yet does an amazing job documenting her father's career and life aboard a wartime submarine. Ms. Fowler also gives a unique perspective on how a loss af a submarine affects so many lives.

It is amazing that you are digging the book,and good that you are reading the Full Fathom Five,and may be it is the opening words of a famous song sung by the spirit Ariel in William Shakespeare,so the things you told about what you are doing now a days,so this is amazing and interesting.

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